Post by account_disabled on Mar 12, 2024 4:00:30 GMT -5
When people ask me techniques, tricks or secrets for writing the perfect post or for creating content that is able to spread and gain readers' approval, I am always perplexed. In the past, in my slides, I have tried to focus on some points and some techniques that work. I tried to line up paths and good practices on how to make good titles, good abstracts and give an immediate and easy-to-understand structure to the content. I am not a copywriter or even a professional journalist. What I have learned I owe to this and other blogs in which I write after having published about 2000 articles.
Analytical mind or intuitive mind? This post was inspired by India Mobile Number Data an article in La Repubblica , "Intuition 'beats' analytical reasoning" , which reports the data from the Drexel University study which shows that: “Hurry and deadlines create a subtle feeling of anxiety,” says John Kounios , a researcher at Drexel University. “And anxiety can turn instinctive reasoning into analytical. For this reason, deadlines are certainly useful if you want to keep people focused, but if you are looking for creative ideas, it is better to have more flexible deadlines. An urgent deadline tends to bring results, but they are rarely creative results." Analytical reasoning is great when we need to analyze data and set up technical solutions.
It's not good in creative jobs where you need to be able to act instinctively and activate intuitive mechanisms. There is no formula for the perfect title, just as there is no technique for setting the right time to publish or for choosing the most suitable photo to insert. All this is the result of an experiential sedimentation , which has consolidated over the years and which has entered the blogger's instinct. Opening a blog is a creative training ground that helps you get to know readers, how they think and react. Then, when you think you understand them, you discover that they have changed and that you have changed too.
Analytical mind or intuitive mind? This post was inspired by India Mobile Number Data an article in La Repubblica , "Intuition 'beats' analytical reasoning" , which reports the data from the Drexel University study which shows that: “Hurry and deadlines create a subtle feeling of anxiety,” says John Kounios , a researcher at Drexel University. “And anxiety can turn instinctive reasoning into analytical. For this reason, deadlines are certainly useful if you want to keep people focused, but if you are looking for creative ideas, it is better to have more flexible deadlines. An urgent deadline tends to bring results, but they are rarely creative results." Analytical reasoning is great when we need to analyze data and set up technical solutions.
It's not good in creative jobs where you need to be able to act instinctively and activate intuitive mechanisms. There is no formula for the perfect title, just as there is no technique for setting the right time to publish or for choosing the most suitable photo to insert. All this is the result of an experiential sedimentation , which has consolidated over the years and which has entered the blogger's instinct. Opening a blog is a creative training ground that helps you get to know readers, how they think and react. Then, when you think you understand them, you discover that they have changed and that you have changed too.